4.7 Article

Role of myeloperoxidase and oxidant formation in the extracellular environment in inflammation-induced tissue damage

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 172, Issue -, Pages 633-651

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2021.07.007

Keywords

Myeloperoxidase; Hypochlorous acid; Inflammation; Oxidation; Protein modification; Extracellular matrix

Funding

  1. Novo Nordisk Foun-dation [NNF13OC0004294, NNF17OC0028990, NNF19OC0058493, NNF20SA0064214]
  2. Independent Research Fund Denmark (Danmarks Frie Forskningsfond) [DFF-7014-00047]

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The heme peroxidase family, especially MPO, generates powerful oxidants for pathogen removal but also causes tissue damage and inflammatory diseases. MPO binds to extracellular biomolecules, leading to localized damage on specific sites and species, affecting cellular dysfunction and altered gene expression. MPO's interaction with damaged ECM components may explain its accumulation at sites of inflammation.
The heme peroxidase family generates a battery of oxidants both for synthetic purposes, and in the innate immune defence against pathogens. Myeloperoxidase (MPO) is the most promiscuous family member, generating powerful oxidizing species including hypochlorous acid (HOCl). Whilst HOCl formation is important in pathogen removal, this species is also implicated in host tissue damage and multiple inflammatory diseases. Significant oxidant formation and damage occurs extracellularly as a result of MPO release via phagolysosomal leakage, cell lysis, extracellular trap formation, and inappropriate trafficking. MPO binds strongly to extracellular biomolecules including polyanionic glycosaminoglycans, proteoglycans, proteins, and DNA. This localizes MPO and subsequent damage, at least partly, to specific sites and species, including extracellular matrix (ECM) components and plasma proteins/lipoproteins. Biopolymer-bound MPO retains, or has enhanced, catalytic activity, though evidence is also available for non-catalytic effects. These interactions, particularly at cell surfaces and with the ECM/glycocalyx induce cellular dysfunction and altered gene expression. MPO binds with higher affinity to some damaged ECM components, rationalizing its accumulation at sites of inflammation. MPO-damaged biomolecules and fragments act as chemo-attractants and cell activators, and can modulate gene and protein expression in naive cells, consistent with an increasing cycle of MPO adhesion, activity, damage, and altered cell function at sites of leukocyte infiltration and activation, with subsequent tissue damage and dysfunction. MPO levels are used clinically both diagnostically and prognostically, and there is increasing interest in strategies to prevent MPO-mediated damage; therapeutic aspects are not discussed as these have been reviewed elsewhere.

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